Show OGDEN CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING- DECEMBER 2j 1928 - 1 ritons dwm to WIlscM Theory of Freedom o eas Blind Man rmds Leprosy Cured John Early Returns To Isolation Soul of A nienca Normal Life After J!'-And Tells F ranee ' ' Has Heard "Unclean" Cry During Vivid Life In America By GERVILLE REACHE One of the Foremost Journalists of France Special Radio Dispatch to The Standard-Examine- r 1 — distinguished Frenchmen have just PARIS Dec fYoni Several a visit to the United States including two Paris deputies Paul Reynard and Georges Scapini — the latter blinded in the war — and also Henri de Kerillis journalist and campaign organizer of the conservative 'party ' Scapini who did not need physical eyesight to see into Amer ica's soul has told the writer his GLUM impressions ''It is easy to compare the French and American democracy" he said "but the comparison is not flatterOVER DELAY IN The American ing to France democracy you see is real it places efficiency ahead of everything and selects leaders from ampng those most fit and pays them veil while the French democracy sinks deeper and deeper into the mire of Berlin Thinks France Has wordy routine under the auspices Put Another Stick of a veritable Chinese Mandarinate "Either we shall change and s Into Wheel rapidly turn toward the effective American methods or else be abBY DR GUST AV sorbed by others more active than Noted German Editor STOLPER and Econom-1s- t ourselves" :K ' The writer objected that Europe Radio Dispatch to The does not present a free field for ra- (SpecialStandard-Examiner) tional organization as America BERLIN Dec 1—The horizon of does the reparations ' negotiations has EUROPE HAS RESOURCES darker instead of lighter grown "That Is true" he answered "but three months have Although political reorganization is not only passed since the Geneva council Europe possible but necessary decided to appoint a comwould make a big enough economic meeting mission of it has not yet unit to warrant complete freorgan-ization- " even been experts how the comof production methods mission shallsettled be td say Europe has the necessary resources nothing of when appointed and where the in brain and treasure All if lacks shall negotiations begin is a practicable plan of organizadifficulties arise continualtion which would eliminate waste ly New At first it was debated fwbo efforts ruinous competition and should take the first step Finally total lack of standardization" out invitations to the M ScapaninI was particularly Germany sent powers other although It had been impressed by America's keenness France that brought up the reparaIn business side by side with its tions hen question at Geneva great generosity in personal rela- came further weeks of exchanging tionships notes and demarches as "The same man who spends the to whether diplomatic commission the should morning driving a sharp bargain i repof the consist government's acover fifty dollars for his firm's or untrammelled exresentatives count "he said "will readily lend ' two thousand dollars to a needy perts This discussion was followed by friend in the afternoon The men another as to whether the experts who have "made fortunes by life- might receive instructions from long unremitting toilrwill give most their governments France wanted of what they possess to general to bind the commission in advance charity or to-- public "institutions J Germany insisted upon complete either at home or abroad we tain freedom of discussions for years without doing anything And now Premier Poincare of but the Americans never waste France has thrust another stick time In discussing things that they between the spokes According to can't immediately execute" the French wishes the experts M Kerillis has written a long would be not by the govseries of articles detailing his ob- ernments appointed but by the reparations ' servations in America but they commission draw so freely on Andre Siegfried's ENGLAND NOT PLEASED recent book that the latter's readobjects to this also Germany ers will learn nothing new from M She has unpleasant recollections of y Kerillis commission and its work and that WOMEN MAKE DIFFERENCE giving it a role in the exOne can't' know a country like regards as incompatible discussion America in a few weeks and what perts' with the Geneva decision In no M Kerillis saw of the formidable case can there be any talk of apAmerican" election campaign will pointment of the German experts scarcely aid him to jolt our little by the commission and England conservative elections committees also' appears not pleased with M out of their lethargy Our elections Poincare's latest move are on a smaller scale and the all these But tactical maneuvers great element of the women's vote have a deeper meaning M Poin is lacking American women are care has reached an age where he magnificently organized politically cannot change his' nature Ho has when us French women have no always been known as a juristic life outside the home They rule formalist and he fights above all over the family— and between the for every letter of the Versailles French family and the American treaty family there is a world of differBut M Poincare is also a statesence man of great parts and one can We French often complain that not believe he creates difficulties views' of our country as sketched where he desires to succeed He in a Tew weeKs tourists visit are becomes day by day more doubtful misleading America may with In his last speech in the chamber equal justice complain that our re- of deputies he felt called - upon turning visitors do not adequately again to refer to the 132000000000 represent her marks at which the German reparaThe French and the Americans tion debt was fixed- in 1021 M know each other but little The Poincare knows as well as the United States knows nothing of rest of the world that these figFrance's strong individualism able ures are fantastical but he clings and skilled workers tenacious peas- to the fiction that the 1921 decision ants hardy colonists and the spirit is a political reality of thrift which is so foreign to HOLDS OFF COMPROMISE American nature On the other One does not do such things if hand France does not comprehend one desires to reach a sensible comAmerica's marvelous organization in the near future For it discipline confidence id the future promise can hardly be imagined that M ambition toward expansion and the Poincare strives to create diffiextension of American influence culties for himself and in remindthroughout the world ing the French public at this time Europe will probably become of that fantastic sum he blocks his more Americanized but America own way to descend from the also will absorb the elements of clouds to earth i r European civilization as Rome was French opposition naturally afHellentzed in conquering Greece fects other countries ' England was never enthusiastic about the Geneva decision and today its skepCARDS GO MODERN ticism is more strongly expressed THIS CHRISTMAS than it was a couple of weeks ago One party desires final regulation NEW FORK— (AP) — Christ- of reparations through sensible remas greeting cards and wrapping duction of Germany's payments papers have "gone modern" The other party does not want Traditional designs of Christ- these efforts to succeed since It mas trees candles halos Santa of the burdens no reduction desires Claus and plum puddings this season are giving way to the same of feared German competitors and ideas expressed in discs angles it does not hesitate before the likelihood that a crisis over the Dawes' and curves For those who prefer the old plan would simultaneously mean a form there are cards with repro- fearful German economic crisis All this naturally i is now unductions of the favorite snow scenes and stage coaches but even known to the American state dethese are bigger than ever and are partment or to Wall street and touched by the modern vogue In America has special political' reathe lining of the envelopes which sons for refraining at the moment display profusions of angles and from engaging In the reparations curves in pink purple red black negotiations gold gray and green In wrapping paper silver trianSOFT-STIF- F COLLAR gles are imposed one upon the LONDON — A representative of a other against a red background to make Christmas trees Winter local shirt and collar firm is enare conventionalized deavored to market something landscapes into wavy bands and much of the new in collars It combines the tiansr itt sfHtipd Tn most nf th rigidity of the stiff collar with the card and paper designs there is comfort of a soft one The insithj noted a tendency to replace the band is of celluloid and the outChristmas tree side of the same material as the "holly spray and motif with pictures soft shirt M 4—— GERMANS DEBtPROGLB? : 1 " ? s - s - f mn 28-Ye- ar J ' ' I " I ' ' ' Bv A! O GARDINER By NEA Service NEW dead England's Greatest Liberal Editbr ORLEANS La —'John has como back from the John EaryJ the country's most famous leper has heard the cry oi his kind changed to "clean!" He may take his place in the world of men John Early is cured This1 is the vvid climax of one of the most dramatic human epics ever lived in jthis Country John Early? leper became as famous as ahyi public celebrity Iflur-in- g the 13 years he played Told with Uncle' Sam refirst that he was 4 lepfr Early fused to believe I and ran away from the hands that would (help i him 'un-cjean- " i !" ? hide-and-se- Sneeial Radio Dispatch to The StandaM-Examine- r T ONDON Dec 1— The question oE fAn&lo-Ar- n erican relations la has suddenly becbrae one of the chief preoccupations oC the public mind and the writer has private reason to know that Prime Minister Baldwin is making the subjcect his special CONTPACTPEO 1XRC0SEV IN THE SPANISH —- i INCro-AStB- ' lggg f V f i ) J ' I province ' DUKE IS CURED ek ufPx A nu7£F frith A V OF STUTTERING Ww - v W SPECIALIST CAUGHT HE FLEES AGAIN He was found arrested prisoned treited for leprosy again and again only to defy his captors and benefactors! and disappear again A baffled beaten contradictory man sometimes submissive and grateful to the hands of science which would help him again sul len and rebellious and so hungry for the mountains of his own country that clean or uncleait he must hide himself in 'their hollows —Early suffused a whole naltion with fear The heading "Early at Large" could send whole cities into panic and Uncle Bam f hunted hirik as though he wjere a murderer kith a price upori his head Less than two years ago even though told that two more wy ears of the chaulihoogra oil cure buld restore him j Jo the world of hor- mal men Early ran away from the leprosarium at Carville La It was his t jventjeth escape from which strug the world of! science gled to save shim I from death If he had mot been recaptured he ' would not be cured today and setting forth: with a smiljje to the mountains "for which he in the vearned while Imprisoned ' ! valley country The dramai of '?01d John Early" when he en began back In 1S98 listed in the Spanish-America- n war The other boys brought tack rich and colorful memories from Cuba and the Philippines Perhaps John Early had his mem ories too but he also brought back that (disease which has caused men to shudder ever since the dawn of ' im- '"''! "un-clean- m jJ- - If 1 I I I 1 II K"" W 1 I i -- :! time--lepro- sy would never shout his own and continued to fight the governknent which tried to help him There was one period when he was pronounced cured and lived like anjy other man with his family Then the government brought in the same old report rearrested him ajnd the game was on Foe the last ten years Early "has been tin the Carville leper station under the special charge of Dr O E Denney officer in charge But ne rani away several times always turning Cup - in the office ot - Dr William Fowler in Washington Whenever ' the headlines had "Early at Large Again" Dr Fowler would put a sentry at his office door so that the alarm could be given the moment he appeared "HAPPIEST MAN ALIVE" But he came back and today he is cfcred! The doctors refuse to use the word "cured" they prefer "arrested" but CarviUe says that of its more than 40 "arrested" patients paroled to the world not one has come back And what of John Early clean? Tm the happiest man in the world I'm g'oing back to my mountain country in North Carolina" he Eays "I speak for the goodness of God and the miracles NAbnr TJME9? w$vrzz John Early did not know It at He was married and the father of two children before his once Doctors made malady appeared mysterious references to "something incurred in the tropics" Early went to Washington and asked :f!or help "You are a leper": they told him "I am not" said Early But the governmeht' seized him It was the scourge of humanity in his: person He could deny his state!! but the government had millions of other human beings to One leper can quickly consider infect an entire country They built a special home for brick home with him —la two-paa wall down the center Early unclean lived on one side of the wall his wife and children clean DEAD A3 f ' HETg ? ward of the nation toj be saved by ' ithe nation A piano was moved close to the jw'all on ithe wife's kl&e ot j the jhouse' Tihe leper sat pn the ther j j i ' listening to old j army songs jaiid sona of home j Sometimes (the wife and childref Were th jgtand tenf feet away from "Daddy" and blow hiii a Armed guards goodnight kiss were ready at a second's notice to lenforce the deadline DOCTORS DISAGREED i i Then even government authorl-'tie- s disagreed as to whether they 'had a leper on thei" hands or!not Early!' was taken from the briek-houand to New York in ' a box ' ! ' car j on with Early play- Years went and hideand-jssee- k iing peek-a-bo- o with tho government j One escape followed anothef fori1 he- himself Sside Iper-Imitt- ed j rt Si lived bn the other The world' of fiction contains few scenes more poignant than life In' this brick home Armed guards saw to It that the "emotions of a human man hungry for sight of wifp and children never interfered with the only life possible for an Imprisoned leper i se " - of science" ' So Old John Early has gone away dapper and gay with a cane in his hand and a song in his heart and no cry or "unclean" upon his lips 9) Another 'Romance F6r '"Thel Great Lover Barrymore Weds Beautiful Actress of Movie Colony :::::: yv 'X'i'i'VV'yViy WinY i Hi mill? m' '' j i j i ii n 'V mi1 '' 1" WHITE LEGHORN HAS RECORD EGG-LAYIN- G i ' v-- By JIOKTENSE SAUNDEKS NKA Service Writer — Thei romance of NEW YORK great lovei of the screen John Barrymore and iDor lores Costello brings him fori the third time before the public in the role of bridegroom and recalls certain points of similarity to his aether adventures in matrimony i Dolores CostellO' is one of the most beautiful daughters of HollyBut the second Mrs wood today a poet actress jand Barrymore playwright as well as a society queen had an international reputation as a beauty when lie married Paul her almost 10 years ag described Helleu French artist her as the most beautiful worrfan in the United States Katharine And his first wpe Harris whom he married in 1910 was one of the most lovely debutantes of the season related on her mothers side to the Lydigs BOTH WERE ACTRESSES a backEach romance has had ' The first of the "stage ground Mrs Barrymore though a society girl had theatrical ambitions ande she played with Barrymore in and 'with Me Xantippe" Ethel Barrymore in "Declasse" She played with John when his firfct motion picture The second Mrs Barrymore known as a writer under the name has h&d a of Michael Strange many-side- d artistic career As beautiful Blanche Oelrichs she was a belle of Newport and New York She divided her time between society and the arts as the wifiehus-of Leonard Thomas her first band rich New York society man After her marriage to Barrymore she became more interested irj the and less In stage and In writing s t society She published a book of poems for which John himself made the illustrations for Barrymore is an atist as well as an actorwas Her exfirst play "Clair de Lune" New In York travagantly produced with both Jack and his famous sister Ethel in the caste But even the Barrymores could rot make the play a popular one TROUBLES IN ROMANCES In spite ot his reputation as a as great lover his secure position on the most popular leading man the stage and screen his extraordinary voice sand his profile second to none Barrymore never has found his matrimonial conquests unattended by difficulties He married the first Mrs Barrymore over the strenuous objections of her father who considered her too young to marry His second wife Is said to" have divorced her husband that she might marry BarAnd the romance! be rymore tween him and the lovely Dolores is rumored to have caused so much friction between her parents that they were divorced Though his first two wives have - egg-layi- :f & " Vif Aft iA r wv ' i ng " V -- ' GH:-:::v:vX- :liili:vV 1 ii fJC 1 rS'x' J sv ' v ' ! - ' '' f: " inttt V'vX'vX-!v-'VV- ' ' AT'rJt V i- - -- " — — r f- f'Be-liev- he-mad-e ? 1 v- - h i I ' -- ! ' 1 - t I i' - s J : i v fA : tf ' " ir i ' ' t i s v ' J egg-layin- Si r: i - i b) V : li v - - j $ec-on- ' " - i I - X To Make te BY KENDALL FOSS United Press Staff Correspondent Dec 1 — (UP)— The LONDON Duke of York is the happiest man in the British empire He no longer stutters' -- P) Mar-kesa- boyhood r i ernment's! ineptitjude HUMILIATING EPISODE This eoinvlctlon began with the Speeches - And if the duke is the happiest man the little duchess is the happiest woman No longer does she sit with an anxious look In her eyes when her husband is making a speech No longer does she grip the edge of the table until her knuckles show white when his royal highness rises to respond to a toast The old fear that he would stutter and be unable to get a word out is gone UNDERGOES CURE The secret of the duke's speech defect has been well kept Since boyhood he has heen troubled and for about two years he has been undergoing a cure — which has proved successful The account of the treatment and cure which the United Press is able to publish today was only obr tained after the most exhaustive inquiries and 'investigations Stammering developed j In the Dukeinhis boyhood As he approached manhood the stammer became a bad speech defect Numerous attempts were made to help him but the Duke was little if any better He was so conscious of his difficulty that he rebelled when it was decided that he should go to Australia to open the new federal capitol at' Canberra He begged to be excused on the ground that such a mission would be sheer agony for him EFFORT SUCCESSFUL Yielding to duty he went but before he went a last effort to cure him was made —an effort which has now proved completely successful Lionel Logue an Australian speech defect specialist nad arrived in London some six months before Hearing of his numerous successes In the treatment ot stammerers the Duke's advisers called Logue in for consultation He undertook the case When His Highness sailed for Australia soon afterward he was able to deliver many speeches with few hitches When the United Press applied to Logue for detail of the cure he politely but firmly refused to discuss the matter Beyond confirming that- the Duke of York had been under his care he said professional etiquet would not let him go The Duke's private secretary was equally unwilling to throw light on this remarkable story j D Ellery Pendell's father helped haul the lumber for the little meeting houe 63 years ago two llcry years after Ellery's birth attended services there ' f ' Fendell now is a retired farmer ' !v When he heard that the church v was closed because it needed repairs he supplied money and ef-it fort to renovate it and reopen i for ' worship women r All celebrated beauties and ail actresses these three Katharine wad to left chose whom 'John Barrymore upper Harris his first wife lshown upper right below are Michael Strange jeft CHINESE ENTERS ' and Dolores Costello FRANCISCAN ORDER been eociety women descended is one daughter Diana by this ' d CINCINNATI marriage (AP) — Friar from old New York families Doj Barrymore has directed and fur- Sylvester hereafter is to be the lores Costello is a daughter of one! thered the stage aspirations of each name of Joseph Cheng a Chinese of the first families of the films wives of his It is common talk iu who has become a Franciscan Two decades ago Maurice Costello' the : inarveouS mopk here Heis the first of his that Hollywood was most the her father probably ' made as a race to enter the Catholic order has Dolores progress adored man on the screen screen luminary has been due to in the United State? 'secure divorce Some three After finishing his studies at St John Barrymore devotion to the years' ago at 19 she Xvent'west Anthony's monastery here Friar Barrymore's blonde Dolores has been known Iooking for a job She Svas anjun-know- n Svlrestor will return to the city since they appeared In their first (chorus girl then Barry- of his nativity Wuchang Hupeh But more : saw her and wasj enchanted China where there is a monastery picture- "The Sea Beast" also everyone knew that he was by her5 looks though he tore his served by American monks from married to Michael Strange The hair at her1 acting Under his? in- Cincinnati divorets was secured in Paris by struction she rapidly rose in 'the Rev Sylvester Espllage of CinMrs without publicity Tilm world unUl she became what cinnati is superior of the Franand came as a great surprise There she U todays— a star ciscan establishment at Wiichang " vi Co-ordina- - i ""'II" Mis Mine! And Diaphragm Ga — (AP) — The chamdistance" "long is of States United the pionship claimed for Princess Gertrude a white Leghorn hen that In 365 days laid 339 eggs' Previously the best record in this country was "held by a white Leghorn at the Washington state station agricultural experiment 335 eggs Jn 365 days The record in New Zealand is 345 and hi British Columbia 357 The latter1 two are the highest of record in the world and were made by white Leghorns Princess Gertrude owned by C A Shepard of Win'terville Ga g won Jier laurels in an contest of 51 weeks at the state college of agriculture at Athens She laid 335 eggs Authorities kept her on the Job another week to round out the year and lay the additional four eggfi that made her METHOD-EXPLAINEthe undisputed queen of all AmeriFortunately a patient ot Logue's can barnyards Of the 1000 hens entered in the was found who was able to Buppjy contest with Prirveess Gertrude 26 certain details of the xoethod of produced more than '300 ggs treatment which is described as a splendid Logue believes according to the state 'record patient that speech is the product of between the mind and of the diaphragm and jwhen RESTORES CHURCH the articulating mechanisms get of step with the other two ATTENDED IN YOUTH out stuttering results Logue's cure is — it is understood based on making : FOND DU LAC Wis--(Athe patient unlearn all the wrong litAfter six 3'ears of silence the he has developed and MethoMaria Lake abandoned tle commence to n jearn to speak all church near dist Episcopal ' once more echoes to the over again spunds of a congregation at worship all because of the affection a man held for the church of his MICHIGAN PREPARES SAVANNAH j J Vi It is not! without significance that Lord Lee whose speech initiated the present discussion is fL close personal friend o f the premier who lives at Chequer the famous Tudor mansion which Lord Lee gave the nation as la residence for the prim$ minister Bu Lord Lee is notia politician of outstanding import ance and the extraordinary interest which his speech aroused is due to the fact that it gave expression to the growing conviction of the govfailure olj the Geneva naval conference but owes iti Intensity to the humiliating episode of the now defunct Anglo-Frenc- h compromise which hajs done pore to discredit the government Ip the public mind than any Other action for which the government has been responsible Whatever the propriety from tho American! point fe view of Representative! Britten's proposal to have a conference between members of parliament and pongress it expresses ih the mjain 'the "'general current of English feeling on tho subject as Lord Lee suggested namely Lhat' the question is one for the f tatesmep ahd that the naval experts must be barred from the whole discussion Repeated ministerial declaiations have ruled out the j(dea of naval competition with America and as the calculations of the- experts are baaed solely on cdmpetltive values their place in the negotiations naturally is irrelevant and calculated only to canaliize the discussion into the' ' '' ' " wrong channel The prbposalrfrr exclusion of tho experts Is universally approved and strong suppcrt ia given to tho' 'suggestion by a 'vriter In the Loudon Times that the question of n relations be submitted t object! re minds on both sides of the Atlantic to report to the two nations all facts i ponderable and imponderable with sugbasis of agreed gestions regardinjra " policy - j " - ? " : Anglo-Anjierica- COMMENTS AVORABLE Approving icon ments of American papers on Lord Lee's proposal -- are much quoted especially the remark of the New York World that relations are "at a point wherjs unless there is a'declded turn for the better they Anglo-Amerlca- n are almost certain to become much worse" i j The urgency cf the matter is strongly emphasised here but some apprehension is expressed Jest any formal attempt from this side to retrieve ithe situation should be misunderstood tjhough there is general agreement that public opinion must Insist Uat the first favorable opportunity be seized for a new attempt conceived in the spirit of Lord Lee's proposal Not the least noticeable feature of that proposal was the reference to the vexed question of the freedom of the seas The writer has Indicated in previous dispatches that the most sigr ificant change on this question is apparent in tb' movement of British public opinion The point of view of America now Is much mors Intelligently understood and even in the popular press the question baa been discussed In an entirely new spirit But this is the first occasion when the suggestion h is been put forward with somet ling approaching official sanction LESSONS OF WAR The fact is thit the lessons of the war hafe been slow to discredit in the official mitd the long established traditions of national security but they are now visibly taking effect This 13 especially So In regard to the problem of securfly at sea which has been wholly Changed by submarine' anil aerial developments The public is beginning to realize that the power to 'blockade is FOR SNOW BATTLE a double-edge- d weapon to which In the new conditions an island on impprts and carrying SAULT STE ilARIE Iich — CAP) — Michigan's romantie wood- normally only a flew weeks supply ed northland is arming for its an- of food 1$ peculiarly vulnerable nual battle of the snows The day la not far distant when New fleets of trucks tractors and England will be foremost advosnow plows are to supplant dog cate of "the Wilsoaiaa doctrine and horse teams and shovels in white breaking the mountain-lik- e barriers which have taken heavy planes here and ope of them made toll of suffering privation and even several trips to Ithe village with A dog team famine and death In the far supplies and"mail howeveri was the first to fight reaches of the timber country Just as winter with Its Ice through the blockade An Improequipped by a packs has wrought havoc to ship- vised snow-mobi- h ping In the upper region of the Sault Bte Marie newspaper also blizzards have managed to reach the town But It Grat Lakes raging Lumber was several week 9 before a highspread peril on land camps and villager have been iso- way was ibfoken through To evert snowi blockades thi lated from the outside world and starvation and death year the ftate has widened and disease stalked behind the high walls of straightened highways in the upper snow peninsula and has brought ImMindful of the plight of Detour proved and more powerful snow Volunteer small community in the St Mary's plows into the rqgion river alley 60 miles from a rail- snow fighting forces have been reroad which last winter was snow- cruited and certain sections of bound for weeks during which its roadway assigned to them E00 Inhabitants were on short raMichigan this year has added tions state and county officials 350 miles of highway to the winhave taken steps to prevent a repe- ter maintenance program making tition of that condition a total of 7041 in!les to be kept The government sent two air- - open stalo-depende- nt |